martes, 21 de enero de 2020

America "In Concert - Live At The Sydney Opera House (DVD)"

In Concert - Live At The Sydney Opera House is a live DVD, released in 2006 by American rock band America.

Track list:
  1. Riverside
  2. Ventura Highway
  3. You Can Do Magic
  4. Don't Cross The River
  5. Daisy Jane
  6. To Each His Own
  7. Company
  8. Three Roses
  9. I Need You
  10. Baby It's Up To You
  11. Wheels Are Turning
  12. Tin Man
  13. The Border
  14. Woman Tonight
  15. Only In Your Heart
  16. California Dreamin'
  17. Lonely People
  18. Hangover
  19. Never Be Lonely
  20. Sandman
  21. Sister Golden Hair
  22. All My Life
  23. Everyone I Meet Is From California
  24. A Horse with No Name
Copyright (c) – Via Vision Entertainment Pty Ltd.
Licensed To – Rhino Entertainment Company

Total duration approx. 154 minutes
Special features: interview (59 Minutes), discography, photo gallery.






Alphaville "Afternoons In Utopia"

Afternoons in Utopia is the second album released by Alphaville in 1986, by Warner Music. The album was recorded between September 1985 and May 1986, and Alphaville employed no less than 27 guest musicians and singers to record the songs. 500,000 copies of the album have been sold.

The album's lyrics make several references to cosmic entities ("sci-fi" as one reviewer called it), including comets, the planet Mars and its landscape, and a starship. When the word "smile" is used in the songs "Afternoons in Utopia," "Lassie Come Home," and "Red Rose," it's printed in the liner notes as the acronym S.M.I².L.E., a reference to Timothy Leary, which stands for "Space Migration, Increased Intelligence, [and] Life Extension."

Marian Gold, singer and songwriter for the band, acknowledged that the message of their music was different from their previous album with this comment, which accompanied the song "Sensations" in the liner notes for the 1992 release First Harvest 1984-92:
Sometimes people used to say, "Have they gone crazy now? Talking with dolphins and all that!!" But I think that once we've learned the language of the dolphins - this mutual approach - that could be the moment of significant change in our messed up civilization.
Track listing
All tracks are written by Marian Gold, Bernhard Lloyd and Ricky Echolette, except as noted.
  1. "IAO" 0:42
  2. "Fantastic Dream" 3:56
  3. "Jerusalem" 4:09
  4. "Dance With Me" 3:59
  5. "Afternoons in Utopia" 3:08
  6. "Sensations" 4:24
  7. "20th Century" 1:25
  8. "The Voyager" 4:37
  9. "Carol Masters" 4:32
  10. "Universal Daddy" 3:57
  11. "Lassie Come Home" 6:59
  12. "Red Rose" 4:05
  13. "Lady Bright" Albert & The Heart of Gold 0:43
The first song, "IAO" (which stands for International Aquarian Opera), begins with the word "night" and fades into the short IAO chorus (which itself is a lyric from the song "Afternoons in Utopia"). The album ends with the song "Lady Bright", a limerick about relativity, wherein the Lady Bright leaves one day and returns "the previous ...[night]", with the word "night" omitted. Thus the album loops back to its beginning.

The song "Afternoons in Utopia" is dedicated "For Inka" in the liner notes for the album.













Alphaville "Forever Young"

Forever Young is the debut album released by German synthpop group Alphaville on September 27, 1984, by Warner Music Group. It charted well, hitting the Top 20 in six European countries and reaching number 1 in Norway and Sweden. Alphaville followed up with their second album in 1986 with the release of Afternoons in Utopia.

The album was re-released in a "super deluxe" edition in March 2019.

The band released the single "Big in Japan" before the album had finished recording, and its success surprised the band and label. Said the band, "'[Big in Japan]' beamed us up into showbiz heaven, half of the album was still be to written. So, while we were in the middle of composing and arranging the residual songs, we were sort of overtaken by our future selves. … Once we wore tattered jeans and sweaty leather jacks … now we were homeless millionaires living in hotel suites and airports." Their sudden and unexpected success affected the rest of the album. In 1986, Gold recalled that he "bought an album of an unknown British band named Big in Japan. As you know, there's a considerable musical market in Japan. If you wanted to become famous, what you should do was to form a hard rock group and then release an album over there; it would definitely sell well... so the story went ... The statement fitted well to my storyline about a couple of drug addicted lovers and moreover provided the title for the prospective song."

The first three tracks the band recorded were "Big in Japan", "Seeds", which was released as the b-side to "Big in Japan", and "Forever Young", which was originally recorded as an up-tempo track. The band wasn't happy with the fast version of "Forever Young", and recording of the track had come to a halt while the band figured out what to do with the song. It was producer Budde who suggested turning the track into a ballad, which is how the song was released.

The band had planned to release "Forever Young" as their second single, to follow the success of "Big in Japan". However, record studio executives requested that the band should be release an additional song between the two singles, and as a result "Sounds Like a Melody" was written and arranged in just two days. Of the experience, singer Marian Gold said "the whole affair felt like an insult to our naive hippie instincts. Writing music exclusively for the sake of commercial success seemed like the sell-out of our virtual beliefs. On the other hand, did this not open up possibilities for wonderful games to play in the brave new world of pop music?" This corporate pressure caused Gold to dislike the song and he refused to play it live for over 15 years.

Some songs they wrote for the album were sung in German ("Blauer Engel", "Traumtanzer", and "Leben Ohne Ende"), but none of the songs ended up making it on the actual release, instead being released as b-sides or on later retrospective albums. Colin Pearson, who co-produced the album, said that Marian Gold would occasionally have problems with lyrics, and then he would remember that Gold was writing in a foreign language.

Band member Bernhard Lloyd said the album was recorded using equipment such as Roland TR-808 and Linn LM-1 drum machines, a Roland System-100M, an ARP String Ensemble and a Roland SDE 200 Digital Delay machine. The album was recorded on Tascam 8-track tapes, and they used a Friendchip SRC machine to synchronize all the tracks.

The song "Summer in Berlin" contains references to the East German uprising of 1953, which occurred on 17 June 1953. When the compilation album Alphaville Amiga Compilation was assembled for release in East Germany in 1988, the song "Summer in Berlin" was submitted for inclusion, but rejected "for political reasons."

"Fallen Angel" was written after "Big in Japan" was released, and the band said "everything changes when you're Number One. The world becomes a big shopping mall where all is for free, people, objects, what-ever. There is something vulgar about all this."

In 1988, Gold said that "In The Mood" is very likely about us, about how we felt in 1984, though we did'nt realize that when we wrote it. The rocket-like success of "Big In Japan" was mind-blowing and irritating at the same time and we were scandalized by a horror of losing our artistic innocence ever since we had signed that record-deal.”

On the song "The Jet Set", Gold said of the song, "We didn't intend to write a proper song; it was supposed to be some kind of jingle that advertises things money can't buy: anarchy, freedom, love, fun and a piece of the end of the world."

On March 15, 2019, the album is remastered for the first time for their 35th anniversary. The package comes with two additional CDs, one with original single versions, B-sides and remixes and the other with 16 original demos. The other disc is a DVD that includes a 60-minute documentary and promo videos. There is also a super deluxe edition that includes the new remaster on vinyl and comes with a 24-page vinyl-sized booklet, created by the art director of the original album in close collaboration with the band and contains a variety of rare and unpublished photos, sleeve notes and various other testimonies.

Track listing
All songs written by Alphaville, Lyrics by Marian Gold, Music by Bernhard Lloyd and Frank Mertens.
  1. "A Victory of Love" – 4:14
  2. "Summer in Berlin" – 4:42
  3. "Big in Japan" – 4:43
  4. "To Germany with Love" – 4:15
  5. "Fallen Angel" – 3:55
  6. "Forever Young" – 3:45
  7. "In the Mood" – 4:29
  8. "Sounds Like a Melody" – 4:42
  9. "Lies" – 3:32
  10. "The Jet Set" – 4:52

Produced by Wolfgang Loos, Colin Pearson and Andreas "Andy" Budde
Recorded and engineered by Wolfgang Loos and Uli Rudolph
Technical assistance by Boris Balin and Thomas Beck
Mixed by Wolfgang Loos
Artwork, Cover Design by Ulf Meyer Zu Kuingdorf
Inner Sleeve Photography by Thomas Reutter
Management by Heinz-Gerd Luetticke














ABBA "The Definitive Collection"

The Definitive Collection is a 2001 compilation album of all the singles released by Swedish pop group ABBA. It consisted of two discs: the first featuring the singles from 1972–79 ("People Need Love" to "Does Your Mother Know"), and the second including the singles from 1979–82 ("Voulez-Vous" to "Under Attack"), with the tracks being listed in chronological order. The main exception is the track "Thank You for the Music", which, despite being written and recorded in 1977, was in fact released as a single (primarily in the UK) in 1983 after the band had split up. It appears on disc two, along with two bonus tracks, "Ring Ring" (1974 UK single remix), and "Voulez-Vous" (1979 US promo extended remix). The Australian version of The Definitive Collection adds a further two bonus tracks: "Rock Me" and "Hasta Mañana". The 1974 remix of "Ring Ring" is the first appearance on CD of this version mastered from the original master tape, after the UK single master tapes had been returned to Polar Music by the former UK licensees, Epic Records. The track's previous appearance on CD, in a 1999 singles boxed set, was mastered from a vinyl single.

The Definitive Collection is the only ABBA compilation to include all the UK single releases from 1973 to 1983. The four "unofficial" UK ABBA singles are included, these being the 1974 remix of "Ring Ring", "Angeleyes", "Lay All Your Love on Me" and "Thank You for the Music". An "unofficial single" is one that was not released by ABBA's record label, Polar Music, in any Scandinavian country.

A DVD also called The Definitive Collection was released in 2002, and features all of ABBA's videos, as well as five bonus videos and a picture gallery. In the US the 2-CD set was bundled with the DVD.

In 2003, the album was ranked number 179 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, maintaining the rating in a 2012 revised list.

Track listing
All songs which are written by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus unless otherwise noted. Tracks 1-4 were originally released under the name "Björn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid".

Disc one
  1. "People Need Love" Ring Ring, 1973; first released as a single the previous year 2:45
  2. "He Is Your Brother" Ring Ring; first released as a single the previous year 3:18
  3. "Ring Ring" (Andersson, Stig Anderson, Ulvaeus, Neil Sedaka, Phil Cody) Ring Ring 3:04
  4. "Love Isn't Easy (But It Sure Is Hard Enough)" Ring Ring 2:53
  5. "Waterloo" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) Waterloo, 1974 2:47
  6. "Honey, Honey" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) Waterloo 2:55
  7. "So Long" ABBA, 1975; released as a single the previous year 3:05
  8. "I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) ABBA 3:16
  9. "SOS" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) ABBA 3:20
  10. "Mamma Mia" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) ABBA 3:32
  11. "Fernando" Fernando single, in a following year; later released on later releases of Greatest Hits, 1975 4:14
  12. "Dancing Queen" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) Arrival, 1976 3:51
  13. "Money, Money, Money" Arrival 3:05
  14. "Knowing Me, Knowing You" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) Arrival; released as a single the following year 4:01
  15. "The Name of the Game" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus) The Album, 1977 4:52
  16. "Take a Chance on Me" The Album 4:05
  17. "Eagle" (Edited Version) The Album; released as a single the following year 4:27
  18. "Summer Night City" Summer Night City - Single in previous year; later released in Greatest Hits Vol. 2, 1979 3:35
  19. "Chiquitita" Voulez-Vous, 1979 5:24
  20. "Does Your Mother Know" Voulez-Vous 3:13
  21. "Rock Me" (Australian bonus track) ABBA, 1975; released as a single the following year 3:08
  22. "Hasta Mañana" (Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus; Australian bonus track) Waterloo 3:11
Disc two
  1. "Voulez-Vous" Voulez-Vous 5:08
  2. "Angeleyes" Voulez-Vous 4:19
  3. "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" Greatest Hits Vol. 2, 1979 4:50
  4. "I Have a Dream" Voulez-Vous 4:42
  5. "The Winner Takes It All" Super Trouper, 1980 4:56
  6. "Super Trouper" Super Trouper 4:13
  7. "On and On and On" Super Trouper 3:42
  8. "Lay All Your Love on Me" Super Trouper 4:34
  9. "One of Us" The Visitors, 1981 3:56
  10. "When All Is Said and Done" The Visitors 3:17
  11. "Head over Heels" The Visitors 3:47
  12. "The Visitors (Crackin' Up)" The Visitors 5:46
  13. "The Day Before You Came" The Singles: The First Ten Years, 1982 5:51
  14. "Under Attack" The Singles: The First Ten Years 3:47
  15. "Thank You for the Music" The Album, 1977; released as a single in support of Thank You for the Music, 1983 3:51
  16. "Ring Ring" (1974 UK single remix; Andersson, Anderson, Ulvaeus, Sedaka, Cody; bonus track) Previously unissued on CD, 2001 3:10
  17. "Voulez-Vous" (1979 US promo extended remix; bonus track) Previously unissued on CD 6:07
DVD

  1. "Waterloo" 2:47
  2. "Ring Ring" 3:04
  3. "Mamma Mia" 3:32
  4. "SOS" 3:20
  5. "Bang-A-Boomerang" 2:50
  6. "I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do" 3:16
  7. "Fernando" 4:14
  8. "Dancing Queen" 3:51
  9. "Money, Money, Money" 3:05
  10. "Knowing Me, Knowing You" 4:01
  11. "That's Me" 3:16
  12. "The Name of the Game" 4:52
  13. "Take a Chance on Me" 4:05
  14. "Eagle" 4:27
  15. "One Man, One Woman" 4:37
  16. "Thank You for the Music" 3:51
  17. "Summer Night City" 3:35
  18. "Chiquitita" 5:24
  19. "Does Your Mother Know" 3:13
  20. "Voulez-Vous" 5:08
  21. "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" 4:50
  22. "On and On and On" 3:42
  23. "The Winner Takes It All" 4:56
  24. "Super Trouper" 4:13
  25. "Happy New Year" 4:23
  26. "When All Is Said and Done" 3:17
  27. "One of Us" 3:56
  28. "Head over Heels" 3:47
  29. "The Day Before You Came" 5:51
  30. "Under Attack" 3:47
  31. "When I Kissed the Teacher" 3:01
  32. "Estoy soñando" ("I Have a Dream") 4:45
  33. "Felicidad" ("Happy New Year") 4:23
  34. "No hay a quien culpar" ("When All Is Said and Done") 3:17
  35. "Dancing Queen" (Live at the Royal Swedish Opera, Stockholm, Sweden)